UB in the News

  • Study to look at new treatments for severe obesity
    3/8/06
    An article distributed by the Associated Press reports that BlueCross BlueShield has commissioned UB to conduct a five-year study of alternatives to gastric bypass surgery for the obese. The article quotes Michael Noe, clinical professor of social and preventive medicine, who said, "Many (patients) have been involved in repeated struggles to lose weight, perhaps jumping from one fad diet or new promising remedy. The real problem for many of them is not necessarily a lack of motivation but rather responding to misguided messages or bad advice."
  • USA Today: UB athletics is busting racial barriers
    2/28/06
    An article on the front page of the sports section of USA Today reports that UB is making sports history as the only Division I-A school with African-Americans in the three most visible posts in its athletics department.
  • Heart risks of ADHD medications a worry to some
    2/21/06
    An article in The New York Times on patients frantically calling their doctors after a government advisory panel's recommendation that ADHD drugs carry a prominent warning about heart risks quotes James Waxmonsky, assistant professor of psychiatry, and William Pelham, professor of psychology.
  • Benefits of smaller class sizes stay with students
    2/19/06
    A St. Petersburg Times article reporting that California is spending $1 billion a year to reduce class sizes, but only in kindergarten through third grade, quoted UB education professor Jeremy Finn, who has studied the issue for the U.S. Department of Education.
  • Engineering those Olympic gold medals
    2/18/06
    An article in The New York Times references a Wired magazine article that discusses the work of Michael S. Holden, who heads the Calspan-University of Buffalo Research Center, on how to reduce drag on skiers, speed skaters and the athletes competing in sledding events.
  • Will Delphi ask court to drop its union contracts?
    2/17/06
    An article in the Chicago Tribune on the likelihood that Delphi Corp. today will seek bankruptcy court approval to drop its union contracts quotes Sam Tiras, assistant professor of accounting and law, who said "There is no way the workers are going to take an unskilled worker's wage, and no way that Delphi can afford to pay them what they make now.... I don't see how in the long run Delphi can survive if the workers hate the company."
  • Jaws: Shark is nature's revenge for debauchery
    2/17/06
    An article on Slate looks at Peter Benchley's novel, "Jaws," and quotes Stefan Fleischer, associate professor of English, who teaches a course on the novel and says "People who are sexual outside of marriage get punished. And if it's society as a whole that has loose morals, it'll get eaten up by a shark."
  • eBooks slow to catch on with technologically hip
    2/16/06
    An Associated Press article on e-books and the slowness with which they are catching on quotes Lewis Mandell, professor of finance and managerial economics, who writes and publishes his own e-textbook and says that because "The investment world is changing on a weekly basis. Tax rates change every year," he's able to update his finance books more frequently.
  • Studies cast doubt on benefits of calcium
    2/16/06
    An article in Newsday looks at the Women's Health Initiative study of the impact of calcium and vitamin D supplements on bone strength and colorectal cancer and quotes Jean Wactawski-Wende, associate professor of social and preventive medicine, who said "Colorectal cancer takes 10 to 20 years to develop. Seven years of supplementation and follow-up may not be enough time to show a benefit."
  • U.S. colleges growing overseas degree programs
    2/13/06
    An article in the Chronicle of Higher Education looks at changes in the responsibilities of Stephen Dunnett, vice provost for international education, whose job when he joined UB in 1989 was to make sure that international students were adjusting to life in the U.S. and doing well academically, but now also includes developing overseas degree programs for foreign students who cannot -- or will not -- come to the United States to study. The article looks at his work in the context of the growing number of colleges nationally that are opening degree programs overseas, both for academic and business reasons.

UB faculty frequently offer expert perspectives on issues that are part of the current public discourse, including ones that may be perceived as controversial. It is our belief—and at the core of UB’s academic mission—that constructive, thoughtful dialogue fosters a better understanding of our world. Thus, we openly share these perspectives.